Men's coxed pair
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
Gold medal coxswain Kent Mitchell (1960)
VenueToda Rowing Course
Dates11–15 October
Competitors48 from 16 nations
Winning time8:21.23
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Edward Ferry
Conn Findlay
Kent Mitchell (cox)
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jacques Morel
Georges Morel
Jean-Claude Darouy (cox)
 France
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Herman Rouwé
Erik Hartsuiker
Jan Just Bos (cox)
 Netherlands

The men's coxed pair event was a rowing event conducted as part of the 1964 Summer Olympics programme.[1] It was held from 11 to 15 October.[2] There were 16 boats (48 competitors) from 16 nations, with each nation limited to a single boat in the event.[2] The event was won by American crew Edward Ferry, Conn Findlay, and coxswain Kent Mitchell. Findlay had been on the United States gold medal crew in 1956 and bronze medal crew in 1960; he was the first man to earn two gold medals in the event, as well as the first man to win three medals of any color in the event. Mitchell had also been on the 1960 crew, and was the seventh man to earn multiple medals in the coxed pair. Jacques Morel, Georges Morel, and cox Jean-Claude Darouy took silver to earn France's first medal in the event since 1952 (the last time a French team had competed). Herman Rouwé, Erik Hartsuiker, Jan Just Bos earned what was formally the Netherlands' first medal in the event; a pair of Dutch rowers had won the first edition in 1900, but had jettisoned their cox in favor of a local French boy between rounds and thus that medal was a "mixed team" medal.

Background

This was the 11th appearance of the event. Rowing had been on the programme in 1896 but was cancelled due to bad weather. The men's coxed pair was one of the original four events in 1900, but was not held in 1904, 1908, or 1912. It returned to the programme after World War I and was held every Games from 1924 to 1992, when it (along with the men's coxed four) was replaced with the men's lightweight double sculls and men's lightweight coxless four.[2]

Six of the 18 competitors from the 1960 coxed pair final returned: Igor Rudakov, the coxswain from the silver medal Soviet Union team; Conn Findlay and Kent Mitchell, rower and coxswain from the bronze medal United States team (Findlay had also won gold in 1956); Jens Berendt Jensen and Knud Nielsen, rowers from the fourth-place Denmark team; and Gheorghe Riffelt, a rower from the sixth-place Romania team. The United Team of Germany sent an East German crew that had won the European championships instead of a West German crew that had won the inaugural World Championship. The American crew had won the 1963 Pan American Games.[2]

Argentina's crew included coxswain Oscar Rompani, at age 60 the oldest Olympic rower.[2]

No nations made their debut in the event. France and the United States each made their ninth appearance, tied for most among nations to that point.

Competition format

The coxed pair event featured three-person boats, with two rowers and a coxswain. It was a sweep rowing event, with the rowers each having one oar (and thus each rowing on one side). The course used the 2000 metres distance that became the Olympic standard in 1912 (with the exception of 1948).[3]

This rowing competition consisted of two main rounds (semifinals and finals), as well as a repechage round that allowed teams that did not win their semifinal heats to advance to the main final. The competition introduced the "B" or "consolation" final, which ranked boats 7 through 12.

  • Semifinals: Three heats. With 16 boats entered, there were five or six boats per heat. The winner of each heat advanced directly to the final; all other boats went to the repechage.
  • Repechage: Three heats. With 13 boats racing in but not winning their initial heats, there were four or five boats per repechage heat. The top boat in each repechage heat advanced to the "A" final, the second and third place boats in each heat went to the "B" final, and the fourth and (where applicable) fifth place boats were eliminated.
  • Finals: The "A" final consisted of the six boats that had won either the preliminary heats or the repechage heats; the "B" final was a ranking final for the 7th through 12th place boats (which had placed 2nd or 3rd in their repechage heats).

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 11 October 196415:00Semifinals
Tuesday, 13 October 196410:00Repechage
Wednesday, 14 October 196415:00Final B
Thursday, 15 October 196415:00Final A

Results

Semifinals

The top crew in each heat advanced to the final, with all others sent to the repechages.

Semifinal 1

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Ed Ferry
Conn Findlay
Kent Mitchell United States7:53.17QA
2Herman Rouwé
Erik Hartsuiker
Jan-Just Bos Netherlands7:56.80R
3Václav Chalupa Sr.
Jiří Palko
Zdeněk Mejstřík Czechoslovakia8:00.07R
4Alfred Sageder
Josef Kloimstein
Peter Salzbacher Austria8:01.22R
5Günter Bergau
Peter Gorny
Karl-Heinz Danielowski United Team of Germany8:02.99R
6Hugo Waser
Adolf Waser
Werner Ehrensperger Switzerland8:09.16R

Semifinal 2

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Jacques Morel
Georges Morel
Jean-Claude Darouy France7:53.14QA
2Nikolay Safronov
Leonid Rakovshchik
Igor Rudakov Soviet Union7:53.15R
3Bruce Richardson
Neil Lodding
Wayne Gammon Australia8:09.15R
4Ante Guberina
Slavko Janjušević
Zdenko Balaš Yugoslavia8:20.33R
5Mohamed El-Halawani
Mahmoud Nasser
Abdullah Ali Egypt8:22.99R

Semifinal 3

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Kazimierz Naskręcki
Marian Siejkowski
Stanisław Kozera Poland7:55.79QA
2Gheorghe Riffelt
Ionel Petrov
Oprea Păunescu Romania8:02.34R
3Jens Berendt Jensen
Knud Nielsen
Niels Olsen Denmark8:08.98R
4Natalio Rossi
Juan Pedro Lier
Oscar Rompani Argentina8:19.63R
5Toshihiro Hamada
Katsuhiko Ihara
Masahiro Takatsuki Japan8:32.51R

Repechage

The top finisher in each of the three repechages joined the finalists. The second and third place finishers competed in a consolation final for 7th to 12th places. All other crews were eliminated.

Repechage heat 1

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Nikolay Safronov
Leonid Rakovshchik
Igor Rudakov Soviet Union7:19.64QA
2Günter Bergau
Peter Gorny
Karl-Heinz Danielowski United Team of Germany7:22.96QB
3Alfred Sageder
Josef Kloimstein
Peter Salzbacher Austria7:30.72QB
4Jens Berendt Jensen
Knud Nielsen
Niels Olsen Denmark7:39.39

Repechage 2

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Václav Chalupa Sr.
Jiří Palko
Zdeněk Mejstřík Czechoslovakia7:28.61QA
2Hugo Waser
Adolf Waser
Werner Ehrensperger Switzerland7:30.60QB
3Gheorghe Riffelt
Ionel Petrov
Oprea Păunescu Romania7:38.36QB
4Ante Guberina
Slavko Janjušević
Zdenko Balaš Yugoslavia7:40.89
5Mohamed El-Halawani
Mahmoud Nasser
Abdullah Ali Egypt7:43.54

Repechage 3

RankRowersCoxswainNationTimeNotes
1Herman Rouwé
Erik Hartsuiker
Jan-Just Bos Netherlands7:28.58QA
2Bruce Richardson
Neil Lodding
Wayne Gammon Australia7:37.53QB
3Natalio Rossi
Juan Pedro Lier
Oscar Rompani Argentina7:44.62QB
4Toshihiro Hamada
Katsuhiko Ihara
Masahiro Takatsuki Japan8:05.30

Finals

Final B

The consolation final determined places from 7th to 12th.

RankRowersCoxswainNationTime
7Günter Bergau
Peter Gorny
Karl-Heinz Danielowski United Team of Germany7:27.98
8Alfred Sageder
Josef Kloimstein
Peter Salzbacher Austria7:31.65
9Bruce Richardson
Neil Lodding
Wayne Gammon Australia7:32.54
10Gheorghe Riffelt
Ionel Petrov
Oprea Păunescu Romania7:35.74
11Hugo Waser
Adolf Waser
Werner Ehrensperger Switzerland7:36.03
12Natalio Rossi
Juan Pedro Lier
Oscar Rompani ArgentinaDNS

Final A

RankRowersCoxswainNationTime
1st place, gold medalist(s)Ed Ferry
Conn Findlay
Kent Mitchell United States8:21.33
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Jacques Morel
Georges Morel
Jean-Claude Darouy France8:23.15
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Herman Rouwé
Erik Hartsuiker
Jan-Just Bos Netherlands8:23.42
4Nikolay Safronov
Leonid Rakovshchik
Igor Rudakov Soviet Union8:24.85
5Václav Chalupa Sr.
Jiří Palko
Zdeněk Mejstřík Czechoslovakia8:36.21
6Kazimierz Naskręcki
Marian Siejkowski
Stanisław Kozera Poland8:40.00

References

  1. "Rowing at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games: Men's Coxed Pairs". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Coxed Pairs, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  3. "Why Do We Race 2000m? The History Behind the Distance". World Rowing. 1 May 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2021.

Sources

  • Tokyo Organizing Committee (1964). The Games of the XVIII Olympiad: Tokyo 1964, vol. 2.
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